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The Externalist Challenge

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The debate between internalism and externalism has become a focal point of attention both in epistemology and in the philosophy of mind and language. Externalism challenges basic traditional ...
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  • 16 December 2004
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The debate between internalism and externalism has become a focal point of attention both in epistemology and in the philosophy of mind and language. Externalism challenges basic traditional internalist conceptions of the nature of knowledge, justification, thought and language. What is at stake, is the very form that theories in epistemology and the philosophy of mind ought to take. This volume is a collection of original contributions of leading international authors reflecting on the present state of the art concerning the exciting controversies between internalism and externalism.

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Price: $161.99
Pages: 527
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: De Gruyter
Publication Date: 16 December 2004
ISBN: 9783110183061
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: PHI004000 PHILOSOPHY / Epistemology
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Richard Schantz ist Professor für Philosophie an der Universität Siegen.



Richard Schantz is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Siegen, Germany.

I In Defence of Epistemic Externalism

W. P. Alston, The "Challenge" of Externalism; J. Greco, Externalism and Skepticism; Th. Grundmann, Counterexamples to Epistemic Externalism Revisited; H. Kornblith, Conditions on Cognitive Sanity and the Death of Internalism; R. Schantz, Empiricism Externalized; E. Sosa, Circularity and Epistemic Priority

II Critiques of Epistemic Externalism

J. Cruz and J. Pollock, The Chimerical Appeal of Epistemic Externalism; R. Feldman, In Search of Internalism and Externalism; R. Fumerton, Inferential Internalism and the Presuppositions of Skeptical Arguments; K. Lehrer and D. A. Truncelitto, Knowledge, Justification and the Cooperative World; B. Stroud, The Epistemological Promise of Externalism; M. Williams, Is Knowledge a Natural Phenomenon?

III In Defence of Content Externalism

J. Haugeland, Social Cartesianism; R. Garrett Millikan, Existence Proof for a Viable Externalism; K. Sterelny, Externalism, Epistemic Artefacts and the Extended Mind; R. Van Gulick, Outing the Mind - A Teleopragmatic Perspective

IV Critiques of Content Externalism

J. Heil, Natural Intentionality; T. Horgan, J. Tienson and G. Graham, Phenomenal Intentionality and the Brain in a Vat; F. Jackson, On an Argument from Properties of Words to Broad Content; G. M. A. Segal, Reference, Causal Powers, Externalist Intuitions and Unicorns

V An Exemplary Debate about Content

G. Rey, Millikan's (Un?)Compromised Externalism; R. Garrett Millikan, Comments on "Millikan's (Un?)Compromised Externalism"

VI Self-Knowledge

S. Bernecker, Believing that You Know and Knowing that You Believe; A. Brueckner, McKinsey Redux?; F. Dretske, Knowing what You Think vs Knowing that You think it; P. Jacob, Do we Know how we Know our own Minds yet?; P. Ludlow, What was I Thinking? Social Externalism, Self-Knowledge, and Shifting Memory Targets; B. McLaughlin, Anti-Individualism and Minimal Self-Knowledge: A Dissolution of Ebbs's Puzzle

VII The Epistemic Significance of Perception

Ch. Peacocke, Explaining Perceptual Entitlement; J. Van Cleve, Externalism and Disjunctivism

VIII An Essay on Intentionality

C. McGinn, The Objects of Intentionality